by Desconhecido
Sir Charles Parsons was the first engineer to be admitted to the Order of Merit.
The Greys
‘The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime.’
These famously haunting words were spoken on the eve of the First World War by the Foreign Secretary, VISCOUNT GREY OF FALLODON, President of the League of Nations, and the longest-serving Foreign Secretary of the 20th century.
The Greys are one of the great Northumberland families. FALLODON HALL, on the coast north of Alnwick, used to have its own private railway station where the Greys had the right to flag down trains on the main line to Edinburgh.
The 1st Earl Grey was a general who introduced marching in step to the British army, a procedure last used by the Roman legions. The 2nd Earl Grey was the Prime Minister who introduced that milestone in the history of English democracy, the Great Reform Act of 1832. He also introduced Earl Grey tea to England.
Tea
The National Drink
TEA was introduced into England in the 1650s, brought in from China by the East India Company and marketed as a tonic that was beneficial to health. First sold by Thomas Garraway at his coffee-house in London’s Exchange Alley, it was made fashionable by Charles II’s wife Catherine of Braganza, daughter of the King of Portugal, the first European country to trade in tea.
Along with tea from China came delicate china cups from which to drink it. These were very fragile and expensive, and the sudden demand for home-produced tea things sparked the rise of the English pottery industry, based at Stoke-on-Trent. Early in the 19th century Josiah Spode invented ‘bone’ china, which proved perfect for tea, being translucent and refined, yet less fragile than porcelain and able to withstand high temperatures.
Once the English had learned to sweeten tea with sugar, it became popular with all classes and during the 18th century even replaced ale as England’s favourite drink.
Boston Tea Party
Throughout the 18th century tea was very heavily taxed, and this led to a great deal of tea smuggling, which hit the profits of the East India Company, who had a monopoly of the tea trade. In order to recoup the losses they were making in England, the Company began exporting to the American colonies. Not only was this tea taxed but the Company was given the sole distribution rights in America. In 1773 three East India Company ships laden with tea arrived in Boston Harbour, but the townsfolk refused to allow the tea ashore or pay the duty, and eventually boarded the ships and threw the tea overboard, in one of the first incidents leading up to the American War of Independence. It is because of the Boston Tea Party that tea is not as popular in the United States as it is in England – patriotic Americans turned to coffee instead.
At the start of the 19th century tea plantations were established in India, using seeds from China, by officials of the East India Company who wanted to grow tea for themselves, and today tea is India’s biggest industry after tourism.
Afternoon Tea
Afternoon tea was the brainchild of ANNA, DUCHESS OF BEDFORD, who in 1840 decided she needed something to keep her going between lunch and the evening meal. Amongst the upper classes dinner was often not served until eight o’clock or later, a custom imported from the Raj in India, where it was sensible not to eat until the heat of the day had cooled. The Duchess ordered her butler to bring her some bread and butter and a cup of tea at 5 p.m., and this proved so refreshing that she began inviting her friends to join her for tea – and a new social occasion was born. The idea soon caught on with the working classes too, who made ‘tea’ into the main meal of the day.
Tea Clippers
While the East India Company had the monopoly of the tea trade, it wasn’t necessary to transport the tea from China to England very quickly, but once the monopoly was broken in the mid-19th century speed became of the essence. The competition to build the fastest tea clipper was fierce, and races between the graceful vessels caught the public imagination. Only one of those tea clippers survives, the CUTTY SARK, which is now berthed at Greenwich.
THE FIRST TEA SHOP was opened in 1864 by the lady manager of the AERATED BREAD COMPANY at London Bridge, who started to sell cups of tea to her customers, and soon there was a chain of ABC tea shops all over London.
In the early 20th century TEA DANCES became popular, while today a great treat is to take tea in a posh hotel such as the Ritz or Browns. Britain is still the world’s largest market for exported tea.
Well, I never knew this
about
NORTHUMBERLAND FOLK
Admiral Lord Collingwood
1750–1810
CUTHBERT COLLINGWOOD was born and educated in Newcastle and joined the Royal Navy in 1761, aged just 12. He distinguished himself in the Caribbean during the American War of Independence and here met Lord Nelson, with whom he became firm friends. He was Nelson’s second-in-command at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, and his ship the Royal Sovereign fired the first shots, almost sinking the Spanish flagship, the Santa Ana, before any other English ship had even entered the fray. When Nelson was mortally wounded, Collingwood took control and saw the English fleet through to victory without the loss of a single ship. England’s mastery of the seas was assured, a domination that was to last for over 100 years.
Collingwood’s smart family home in Morpeth still stands on the town’s oldest street, Oldgate, and is now a priest’s home. ‘Whenever I think how I am to be happy again, my thoughts carry me back to Morpeth,’ he once said, but he never returned there after Trafalgar and died at sea off Minorca in 1810. He is buried beside Lord Nelson in St Paul’s Cathedral.
Collingwood’s House in Morpeth
Emily Wilding Davison
1872–1913
Buried in the churchyard at Morpeth, under a headstone bearing the phrase ‘Deeds, not Words’, is EMILY WILDING DAVISON, a passionate suffragette who lived her life by Benjamin Franklin’s adage ‘Rebellion against tyrants is obedience to God’. She wrote this down on pieces of paper, which she then wrapped around rocks and threw at David Lloyd-George. She was frequently arrested, tried to fling herself off the roof of Holloway prison and went on hunger strike. On one occasion, when she blockaded her cell door, a warder fed a hose pipe through the window bars and filled the cell with ice-cold water. The door was broken down just before she drowned, but she managed to successfully sue the prison authorities.
On 4 June 1913, at the Epsom Derby, carrying a banner of the Women’s Social and Political Union, she stepped out in front the King’s horse, Anmer, and tried to grab the reins, but was trampled under foot and died from her injuries a few days later. Her handbag was found to contain a return ticket to Epsom and a diary full of forthcoming events, which seems to indicate that she was not intending to commit suicide. Although her death had no immediate effect, she became an enduring symbol of the fight for women’s rights, and her brave but foolish gesture undoubtedly brought votes for the women of England much closer – it may indeed have done more for the extension of English democracy than her fellow Northumbrian Earl Grey’s Great Reform Act.
Born in Northumberland
MARY ASTELL (1666–1731), author of A Serious Proposal to the Ladies for the Advancement of Their True and Greatest Interest, regarded as the first English feminist, was born in NEWCASTLE.
SIR GEORGE AIREY (1801–92), Astronomer Royal responsible for establishing Greenwich as the Prime Meridian, was born in ALNWICK.
Footballers JACKIE MILBURN (1924–88) and the World Cup winning CHARLTON brothers JACK (b.1935) and BOBBY (b. 1937) were all born in ASHINGTON.
Nottinghamshire
ROBIN HOOD ∗ MAJOR OAK
Robin Hood, a very English hero.
NOTTINGHAMSHIRE FOLK
Thomas Cranmer ∗ The Reverend William Lee ∗ D.H. Lawrence
∗ William Brewster ∗ Nicholas Hawksmoor ∗ Erasmus Darwind ∗ Eric Coates
Nottingham
Nottingham and Sherwood Forest will for ever be associated with the
best-loved and most famous English folk hero of them all, ROBIN HOOD. Wielding an English longbow, battling a Norman king and defending downtrodden English folk from tyrannical French aristocrats such as Guy de Gisburne, his story mirrors the struggles against arbitrary authority that were the background to medieval England, and led to Magna Carta.
Like King Arthur, Robin Hood was probably an amalgam of several real characters. One suggested candidate is Robert FitzOdo (1160–1247), Earl of Huntingdon, born at Loxley in Warwickshire (Robin Hood is sometimes referred to as Robin of Loxley), and buried in the churchyard there. He was outlawed at the end of the 12th century and his lands were transferred to Ranulf, Earl of Chester, an event that is mentioned in William Langland’s Piers Plowman, written in 1377, which includes the earliest known literary reference to Robin Hood.
There is another Loxley (spelt Locksley), in Barnsdale Forest in Yorkshire, which could be the birthplace of Robin Hood, and indeed the early ballads talk about Robin of Barnsdale. This might favour the idea that Robin Hood was Robert Hood (1290–1347), who was outlawed by the court in Wakefield for supporting the Earl of Lancaster against Edward II at the Battle of Boroughbridge.
A further suggestion is that he was Robert, Earl of Huntingdon, the great grandson of King David of Scotland and a kinsman of Robert the Bruce, who was dispossessed of his lands by King John.
While Barnsdale Forest has some claims to be Robin Hood’s stamping ground, most stories place him in Sherwood Forest, which in his day covered over 100,000 acres (40,000 ha) of the heart of England, and although it has shrunk to just 450 acres (182 ha) today there are still many places associated with Robin Hood and his Merry Men that can be visited.
Edwinstowe
A good place to start is St Mary’s Church in the pretty village of EDWINSTOWE, set in the heart of Sherwood Country Park beside the River Maun.
Edwinstowe is named after the Saxon King Edwin of Northumbria, whose kingdom at that time stretched from the River Trent to Edinburgh (Edwin’s borough). Having been converted to Christianity by his wife Princess Ethelburga of Kent, Edwin marched south in 633 to fight the pagan King Penda of Mercia, and was killed during the ensuing Battle of Hatfield, at a small settlement in Sherwood Forest now called Cuckney. His body was secretly buried in a forest clearing to conceal it from Penda, and when Edwin’s followers returned to take Edwin to his final resting-place at Whitby Abbey, a wooden chapel was raised over where he had lain – ‘Edwin’s Holy Place’, or Edwinstowe.
In 1175 a stone church was built to replace the wooden chapel, one of many churches put up by Henry II as penance for the murder of Thomas à Becket. It was here, at ‘the church in the forest’, that Robin Hood and Maid Marian were said to have been married.
Buried in the churchyard to the west of the tower is a distinguished incumbent of St Mary’s, the REV DR EBENEZER COBHAM BREWER (1810–97), who compiled Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable.
Major Oak
Not a mile from the church at Edwinstowe is Robin Hood’s main hideout, the MAJOR OAK, named after the antiquary Major Hayman Rooke, who wrote about the tree in 1790. It is one of the oldest and biggest oak trees in England, and stands in its own clearing with smaller oaks and silver birches keeping a respectful distance. In the hollow trunk, 30 ft (9 m) round, Robin Hood and his men would hide and plot their next ambush.
The oak tree has long been a symbol of English strength and resilience – with Charles II having hidden in an oak tree and English sailors having ‘hearts of oak’ – and for Robin Hood to make an oak his fortress is somehow fitting.
Further south near Newstead Abbey is the village of BLIDWORTH, where Maid Marian is said to have lived before her marriage to Robin and from where she was escorted to Edwinstowe by Will Scarlet – who may lie in the churchyard. A little way to the west in lovely Fountaindale is Friar Tuck’s Well, near a moated area where the Friar had his home, and where he and Robin disputed the right of way, with Robin ending up in the water. A footbridge used to carry the public path across the moat and it may have been on this bridge that Robin and Little John fought.
Further south again is PAPPLEWICK, where Robin Hood stabled his horse, near the main route through the forest, the King’s Great Way, in a cave guarded by yet another oak tree. The minstrel Alan a Dale married his ‘fair lady Ellen’ in the original 12th-century church at Papplewick and may be buried under the present church.
St James’s church at Papplewick, built in the late 12th century, was another of Henry II’s ‘penance’ churches like that at Edwinstowe. It was restored in 1795 by the Hon. Frederick Montagu, Squire of Papplewick Hall, up on the hill. Inside, at the east end, is his ‘squire’s pew’ retaining its private fireplace – Montagu would rattle the coals with his fire iron if he thought the sermon was going on too long.
Well, I never knew this
about
NOTTINGHAMSHIRE FOLK
Thomas Cranmer
1489–1556
THOMAS CRANMER, THE FIRST PROTESTANT ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY, was born in ASLOCKTON, a small village in the Vale of Belvoir east of Nottingham. Although the old manor house where he came into the world has gone, there is a moated hillock in a field near the site known locally as ‘Cranmer’s Mound’. Here, as a boy, he would sit and admire the view, while listening to the bells of Whatton church ringing across the river.
Cranmer studied at Cambridge and took Holy Orders in 1523. He came to the attention of Henry VIII when he suggested that the King should ignore the Pope and allow English churchmen to decide on the legality of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon, taking their guidance from the Scriptures. On becoming Archbishop he declared Henry’s marriage to Catherine illegal and publicly married Henry to Anne Boleyn.
Cranmer was a leading figure in the English Reformation, and a founder of the Church of England. He urged the Dissolution of the Monasteries, believing that the money would be better spent on religious teaching and education, and strongly supported the translation of the Bible into English, so that more people could read the Scriptures and learn for themselves. In 1545 he wrote the first Litany in the English language, which is still used today, while his greatest work was the BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER, published in 1549, which many people think contains some of the most beautiful written English ever composed. Used day after day by millions of English churchgoers during the later 16th century, Cranmer’s Book of Common Prayer spread a shared English language across the country, undoubtedly contributed to the brilliance of Shakespeare, and gave to English writers and poets the richest and most adaptable language in the world as their tool.
Cranmer’s leading role in the Reformation and his annulment of Henry VIII’s marriage to Queen Mary’s mother Catherine of Aragon earned the hatred of the Bloody Queen (Mary, Mary, quite contrary) and he was burned at the stake in Oxford in 1556.
The Reverend William Lee
1560–1610
An early pioneer of the Industrial Revolution, THE REV WILLIAM LEE, was born in CALVERTON, a large straggling village at the foot of the hills between Nottingham and Southwell. In 1589 he patented THE STOCKING-FRAME, the first piece of apparatus ever made that could produce looped or knotted fabric, and which could make 12 stockings, woollen or silk, for every one knitted by hand. It was an astonishing invention that pre-dated the machinery of the factory age by nearly 200 years, and was the prototype for every machine in use in the world today.
The story goes that Lee was driven to create his frame so that his sweetheart might spend less time knitting and devote more time to him. Unfortunately, Elizabeth I refused to recognise the stocking-frame, afraid that it might cause unemployment amongst the hand-knitters, which indeed it did, and Lee had to go to France for patronage. The frames made there were eventually returned to Nottinghamshire and led to the growth of the county as a centre for the hosiery trade. Like so many brilliant men, Lee was no businessman and died a pauper in Paris, where he lies in an unknown grave, having made nothing from his invention that woul
d one day create untold wealth for England and millions of Englishmen.
D.H. Lawrence
1885–1930
Nottinghamshire village life colours and infuses the novels of controversial writer D.H. LAWRENCE, who was born the son of a coalminer in EASTWOOD, where his birthplace, 8A Victoria Street, is now a museum in his memory. Lawrence’s semi-autobiographical Sons and Lovers, published in 1913 and set in a coalmining village, is regarded as the first English novel to originate from, and focus on, the English working class.
Not far from his home is Haggs Farm, where Lawrence’s first love Jessie Matthews lived. She appears as Miriam in Sons and Lovers, as does her farm – ‘Miriam’s farm, where I got my first incentive to write’.
The sexually explicit nature of his work, particularly Lady Chatterley’s Lover, shocked the censors of the day and led to a celebrated trial that rewrote the obscenity laws as applied to English literature. Although published in Italy in 1928, Lady Chatterley’s Lover was banned in Britain for its obscene content until 1960, when Penguin sought permission to publish it, along with Lawrence’s other works, to celebrate the 30th anniversary of his death. After a six-day hearing at the Old Bailey objections to the publication were overruled, and within a year the book had sold over two million copies.
Born in Nottinghamshire
WILLIAM BREWSTER (1567–1644), leader of the Pilgrim Fathers, was born in SCROOBY. His descendants include Katherine Hepburn, Bing Crosby, Richard Gere, Chevy Chase and the 12th US President, Zachary Taylor.
NICHOLAS HAWKSMOOR (1661–1736), architect, known for Easton Neston in Northamptonshire, the west towers of Westminster Abbey and six London churches, was born in EAST DRAYTON.